Handheld micromanipulator for robot-assisted stapes footplate surgery
Abstract
Stapes footplate surgery is complex and delicate. This surgery is carried out in the middle ear to improve hearing. High accuracy is required to avoid critical tissues and structures near the surgical worksite. By suppressing the surgeon's tremor during the operation, accuracy can be improved. In this paper, a fully handheld active micromanipulator known as Micron is evaluated for its feasibility for this delicate operation. An ergonomic handle, a custom tip, and a brace attachment were designed for stapes footplate surgery and tested in a fenestration task through a fixed speculum. Accuracy was measured during simulated surgery in two different scenarios: Micron off (unaided) and Micron on (aided), both with image guidance. Preliminary results show that Micron significantly reduces the mean position error and the mean duration of time spent in specified dangerous zones.
BibTeX
@conference{Montes-2012-120610,author = {G. Montes Grande and A. J. Knisely and B. C. Becker and S. Yang and B. E. Hirsch and C. N. Riviere},
title = {Handheld micromanipulator for robot-assisted stapes footplate surgery},
booktitle = {Proceedings of 34th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC '12)},
year = {2012},
month = {August},
pages = {1422 - 1425},
}